Why does Cascadia offer overnight trips for students? My child has never spent the night away from home!
Dear Happy Camper,
At Cascadia, overnight trips have become an important part of Montessori learning. Each trip is carefully planned to meet the developmental needs of students in the second and third plane of development (elementary and adolescence). For the first time since the Covid pandemic, our lower elementary students are getting this experience, and each overnight trip gets progressively longer to ease children into these independent journeys away from their families. Far from being just a trip, these experiences are carefully planned opportunities for students to discover who they are, what they're capable of, and how they are a part of the larger community and the wider world.
While all Cascadia students, including our 6 to 9 year olds, spent a week away camping with their classmates and staff a few decades ago, this year we return to a more recent tradition of the Lower Elementary classrooms attending an outdoor camp for one night. For some, it will be their first night away from home. During this trip, they explore the outdoors, work together in groups, use their practical life skills outside of the classroom, and grow! This opportunity for developing independence can be transformative, and in the past we've seen new levels of independence in children practically overnight. With over 40 parents chaperoning for this first year at Camp Hope, we're just happy to be getting our feet wet, but know that independence is the foremost goal, and next year will look a bit different!
After a few years of an overnight experience in Lower Elementary, our Upper Elementary classes are ready for a 2 night outdoor science camp. This spring, students went to Camp Hancock Field Station in the Oregon desert. Some years they visit Camp Gray, on the coast. These OMSI (Oregon Museum of Science and Industry) camps provide students with increasing opportunities to apply their practical life skills, like packing to be prepared for weather, helping with communal meals, and being responsible for their bedding. Every task empowers them to develop self-reliance and problem-solving skills, as well as rich opportunities to get to know one another and strengthen relationships with peers and classroom adults.
Our adolescent students experience a few multi-night trips each year, traveling further from the local community to attend either Naturebridge Olympic science camp in Olympic National Park or Catalina Island Marine Institute's science school in Southern California. This year, students will visit Naturebridge. In addition, at the beginning of each school year, the adolescent program takes a three night camping trip (called an Odyssey) that allows for intensive team building, and an introduction to aspects of middle school life at Cascadia. The trip is key to everything that unfolds during the school year, and is a fun way to get started, working together to set up camp, prepare meals, and organize hiking, swimming, storytelling, singing, and lots of games.
Experiences like these support the Cascadia child's growing independence, laying the groundwork for transitions in later life: the start of high school, going away to college, a first job, and beyond. As they conquer challenges outside their comfort zone, their confidence soars, organically building autonomy and independence that they'll continue to draw upon throughout their school years and beyond. It's also invaluable for the child's family, too, to see how truly capable our children are!
A final note: If this is your child's first year spending the night with classmates at an overnight camp, know that it is okay to ask their guide for some extra help preparing. And while we want to see your children thrive in these experiences, if it doesn't happen in their first year, they will have a new opportunity to participate every year.
Sincerely,
Maria









